Traffic & Transit

National Railroad Strike Looms, Threatens To Disrupt MARC Train Service In MD

A national railroad strike is inching closer to reality. The potential strike would immediately disrupt commuter rail service in Maryland.

CSX Transportation workers may start a strike on Friday. The potential strike would immediately suspend service on the Camden and Brunswick lines of the Maryland Area Rail Commuter, also known as the MARC train.
CSX Transportation workers may start a strike on Friday. The potential strike would immediately suspend service on the Camden and Brunswick lines of the Maryland Area Rail Commuter, also known as the MARC train. (Jacob Baumgart/Patch)

Update: Rail companies reached an agreement Thursday to prevent a train worker strike. This story was written before that deal. Click here to read our coverage of the agreement to avoid a work stoppage.


MARYLAND — A looming national freight railroad strike Friday is expected to affect commuter rail traffic in Maryland. Industry analysts warn that a walkout will re-tangle supply chains and deal a crippling blow to the U.S. economy.

A tentative agreement was rejected Wednesday by one of the railroad unions yet to strike a deal with negotiators as the first national railroad strike in 30 years becomes closer to reality, The Wall Street Journal reported.

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A potential strike would disrupt service from the Maryland Area Rail Commuter, also known as the MARC train. A strike would cancel trains starting Friday on the Camden and Brunswick lines because of their reliance on CSX Transportation, a freight rail company.

"Since CSX owns and maintains the Camden and Brunswick lines in addition to dispatching MARC trains, any labor strike would result in the immediate suspension of all MARC Camden and Brunswick Line service until a resolution is reached," MARC said on its website.

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MARC suggested taking these alternate routes if a strike stymies the Camden and Brunswick lines.

The Penn Line will run as scheduled, even if there is a strike, because it shares tracks with Amtrak.

Amtrak owns most of the tracks that it uses in the Northeast Corridor, WTOP said. The passenger railway company said routes between Boston, New York and Washington, D.C., will see “no impact,” and only minimal changes are expected elsewhere in the Northeast.

Related: Potential Railroad Strike Could Disrupt Train Service In NoVA, DC

Marylanders who planned cross-country trips by Amtrak already may already be feeling the effects of the dispute between the nation’s major railroads and their unions.

Amtrak canceled all of its long-distance routes starting Thursday. These trains were suspended:

  • Southwest Chief
  • Empire Builder
  • California Zephyr
  • City of New Orleans
  • Coast Starlight
  • Crescent
  • Lake Shore Limited
  • Silver Star
  • Sunset Limited
  • Texas Eagle
  • Auto Train
  • Capitol Limited
  • Cardinal
  • Palmetto (south of Washington)

The company also canceled these state-supported routes for Thursday evening:

  • Capitol Corridor
  • Cascades
  • Heartland Flyer
  • Illinois Service
  • Michigan Service
  • Pacific Surfliner
  • Piedmont
  • San Joaquins
  • Springfield Service (north of Springfield)
  • Virginia Service

"[We] will only operate trains this week that we can ensure will have enough time to reach their final destinations by 12:01 a.m. on Friday," an Amtrak spokesperson told Patch.

Related: All Amtrak Long-Distance Routes Canceled Ahead Of Possible Strike

Some regional commuter rail systems could be affected as well, including Chicago’s Metra, Virginia Railway Express and the Maryland Area Regional Commuter Train Service, The Washington Post reported. Those systems lease tracks owned by the freight lines.

A labor walkout would shut down 30 percent of the nation’s freight and also “halt most passenger and commuter rail services,” the freight industry has warned. Freight railroads have already taken steps to ensure that sensitive and hazardous materials, including chlorine for drinking water, don’t get held up mid-journey.

The Association of American Railroads trade group put out a report last week estimating that shutting down the railroads would cost the economy $2 billion a day cost to the economy.

President Joe Biden blocked a strike by the 115,000 railroad workers through executive action in July, imposing a 60-day “cooling off” period that expires at 12:01 a.m. EDT.

The White House said Tuesday that Secretary of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and his agency are working to lessen the effects of a strike on critical resources, including food drinking water and electricity. Politico reported that at least two Cabinet secretaries and Biden are directly involved in efforts to avert a national railroad strike and have spoken with negotiators on both sides of the labor dispute.

The coalition negotiating on behalf of the nation's biggest freight railroads — including Union Pacific, CSX, Norfolk Southern, BNSF and Kansas City Southern — has reached most of the tentative agreements needed to avoid a strike, but high hurdles remain.

Negotiators are at loggerheads on scheduling and sick time policies that conductors and engineers say keep them “on call” even on days they’re not scheduled to work, issues the White House’s Presidential Emergency Board said are best resolved through grievance and arbitration processes.

“The primary resistance comes from Union Pacific and BNSF because of the attendance policies they have adopted which have treated workers so poorly,” Dennis Pierce, the president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, told CNBC. “We’re just looking for time away from work to address our medical issues. Union Pacific and BNSF attendance policies are assessing (penalty) points to our members when they just want to take time off for their regular medical appointments.”

Congress could still step in to prevent a strike, which U.S. Chamber of Commerce Secretary Suzanne Clark said Monday would be an “economic disaster, freezing the flow of goods, emptying shelves, shuttering workplaces and raising prices for families and businesses alike.”

The chamber joined a growing coalition of business groups, including 31 agricultural shipping trade groups, sending letters to Congress urging lawmakers to step in and block the strike if the two sides can’t reach an agreement by Friday’s deadline.

The possibility of congressional intervention is a slippery slope, especially for Democrats counting on support and votes from union allies in the November midterms.

“The president is bragging about how much influence he has with unions and how much influence they have with him,” Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell told reporters Tuesday.

However, Democrats favor waiting to see if the railroads and unions reach an agreement.

“Let’s wait a few days and see if there’s an agreement that’s reached,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent, told reporters.

The Associated Press and Patch editor Feroze Dhanoa contributed reporting.

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